(HealthDay)—The expected increase in high-deductible health plan (HDHP) enrollment due to implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) highlights the need for more research into the health impact of HDHPs, according to a perspective piece published online Oct. 2 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
J. Frank Wharam, M.B., B.Ch., M.P.H., from Harvard Medical School in Boston, and colleagues discuss the potential impact of the ACA on HDHPs.
The researchers note that the ACA will expand HDHP overage, with small and larger employers and individuals likely to choose plans with high deductibles. Research suggests that HDHPs cause a reduction in the use of essential and non-essential health services, and adverse health risks for low-income people. Furthermore, there is currently limited research examining the effects of HDHPs on major health outcomes. Until more research is available, consumers should be educated about the best venues for purchasing health insurance; those eligible should be shifted into low-cost-sharing plans; employers should facilitate contributions to health savings accounts; education should be intensified about HDHPs; and patient-physician decision making and access to decision tools should be facilitated. In the longer-term, creation of a more sophisticated HDHP-centered system will depend on research and evidence-based policies.
"Expanding health insurance coverage will substantially increase HDHP enrollment, but the system doesn't have to be blunt and inequitable," the authors write.
Explore further: Men cut back on needed health care after switching to high-deductible insurance plans
More information: Full Text
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(HealthDay)—The expected increase in high-deductible health plan (HDHP) enrollment due to implementation of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) highlights the need for more research into the health impact of HDHPs, according to a perspective piece published online Oct. 2 in the New England Journal of Medicine.
J. Frank Wharam, M.B., B.Ch., M.P.H., from Harvard Medical School in Boston, and colleagues discuss the potential impact of the ACA on HDHPs.
The researchers note that the ACA will expand HDHP overage, with small and larger employers and individuals likely to choose plans with high deductibles. Research suggests that HDHPs cause a reduction in the use of essential and non-essential health services, and adverse health risks for low-income people. Furthermore, there is currently limited research examining the effects of HDHPs on major health outcomes. Until more research is available, consumers should be educated about the best venues for purchasing health insurance; those eligible should be shifted into low-cost-sharing plans; employers should facilitate contributions to health savings accounts; education should be intensified about HDHPs; and patient-physician decision making and access to decision tools should be facilitated. In the longer-term, creation of a more sophisticated HDHP-centered system will depend on research and evidence-based policies.
"Expanding health insurance coverage will substantially increase HDHP enrollment, but the system doesn't have to be blunt and inequitable," the authors write.
Explore further: Men cut back on needed health care after switching to high-deductible insurance plans
More information: Full Text
Copyright © 2013 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
Medical Xpress on facebook
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Men cut back on needed health care after switching to high-deductible insurance plans
Jul 16, 2013
After switching to high-deductible health plans (HDHPs) in the US, men make fewer emergency department visits for even severe problems—which may lead to a later increase in hospitalization rates, suggests a study in the ...
ACP provides overview of health insurance marketplaces
Sep 25, 2013
(HealthDay)—The opportunities and challenges presented by health care reform are discussed in an article published online Sept. 24 in the Annals of Internal Medicine.
Many health care professionals oppose ACA proposals
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About one in four uninsured could be excluded from ACA
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Why do humans pig out?
5 hours ago
Researchers from University of Copenhagen have discovered big differences in the variability of eating habits among pigs. The newly published study showed that for some (pigs with certain genetic variants) ...
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